National and international regulations of seafood quality and
1. NATIONAL AND INTERNATIONAL
REGULATIONS FOR SEAFOOD QUALITY
AND SAFETY
By: ABDULRAHMAN MOHAMMED
(L-2012-V-21-D)
School of Public Health and Zoonoses
GADVASU, Ludhiana
CREDIT SEMINAR-I
2. Introduction
• Seafood is any form of sea life regarded as food by
humans.
• Seafood prominently includes fish and shellfish.
Shellfish include various species of molluscs, crustaceans,
and echinoderms.
Historically, sea mammals such as whales and dolphins
have been consumed as food, though that happens to
a lesser extent these days.
Edible sea plants, such as
some seaweeds and microalgae, are widely eaten as
seafood around the world, especially in Asia.
3. Introduction….
• In North America, although not generally in the United
Kingdom, the term "seafood" is extended to fresh
water organisms eaten by humans, so all edible aquatic
life may be referred to as seafood.
• Food quality, including safety, is a major concern facing the
food industry today.
• A number of surveys have shown that consumer awareness
about quality of their food is increasing.
• A great number of socio-economic changes such as increased
urbanization (crowding), migrations and population
demographics are further contributing to the safety of foods.
4. Introduction….
• The population of highly susceptible persons is
expanding worldwide because of ageing, malnutrition,
HIV infections and other underlying medical conditions
with a weakened immune system.
• Food control includes all activities carried out to ensure
the quality and safety of food.
• Every stage from initial production to processing,
storage, marketing and consumption must be included
in a food quality and safety programme.
5. Introduction….
• Fish and fishery products are in the forefront of food
safety and quality improvement because they are
among the most internationally traded food
commodities.
• In 2010, fish trade amounted to US $217.5 billion, of
which approximately 50 percent originated in
developing countries
6. TYPES OF SEAFOOD
Seafood and Fish
shellfish
Mollusks
Clams
Oysters
Squid
Octopus
Arthropods
Shrimp
Lobster
Crab
Crawfish
Bony
Catfish
Bass
Trout
Salmon
Cartiligenous
Sharks
Rays
Finfish
7. WORLD SEAFOOD PRODUCTION
• World fish food supply has grown dramatically in the last five decades,
with an average growth rate of 3.2 percent per year in the period 1961–
2009, outpacing the increase of 1.7 percent per year in the world’s
population.
• World per capita food fish supply increased from an average of 9.9 kg (live
weight equivalent) in the 1960s to 18.4 kg in 2009, and preliminary
estimates for 2010 point to a further increase in fish consumption to 18.6
kg.
• Of the 126 million tonnes available for human consumption in 2009, fish
consumption was lowest in Africa (9.1 million tonnes, with 9.1 kg per
capita), while Asia accounted for two-thirds of total consumption, with
85.4 million tonnes (20.7 kg per capita), of which 42.8 million tonnes was
consumed outside China (15.4 kg per capita).
8. WORLD SEAFOOD PRODUCTION
2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011
(Million tonnes)
PRODUCTION
Capture
Inland 9.8 10.0 10.2 10.4 11.2 11.5
Marine 80.2 80.4 79.5 79.2 77.4 78.9
Total capture 90.0 90.3 89.7 89.6 88.6 90.4
Aquaculture
Inland 31.3 33.4 36.0 38.1 41.7 44.3
Marine 16.0 16.6 16.9 17.6 18.1 19.3
Total aquaculture 47.3 49.9 52.9 55.7 59.9 63.6
TOTAL WORLD FISHERIES 137.3 140.2 142.6 145.3 148.5 154.0
UTILIZATION
Human consumption 114.3 117.3 119.7 123.6 128.3 130.8
Non-food uses 23.0 23.0 22.9 21.8 20.2 23.2
Population (billions) 6.6 6.7 6.7 6.8 6.9 7.0
Per capita food fish supply (kg) 17.4 17.6 17.8 18.1 18.6 18.8
9. Health benefits
• Research over the past few decades has shown that the
nutrients and minerals in seafood can make improvements in
brain development and reproduction and has highlighted the
role for seafood in the functions of the human body.
• Doctors have known of strong links between fish and healthy
hearts ever since they noticed that fish-eating Inuit
populations in the Arctic had low levels of heart disease.
• One study has suggested that adding one portion of fish a week
to your diet can cut your chances of suffering a heart attack by
half.
10. Health benefits…..
• Fish is thought to protect the heart because eating
less saturated fat and more Omega-3 can help to lower the
amount of cholesterol and triglycerides in the blood – two
fats that, in excess, increase the risk of heart disease.
• Omega-3 fats also have natural built-in anti-oxidants, which
are thought to stop the thickening and damaging of artery
walls.
• Regularly eating fish oils is also thought to reduce the risk
of arrhythmia – irregular electrical activity in the heart which
increases the risk of sudden heart attacks.
11. Health benefits…..
Fish is high in minerals such as zinc, iodine and selenium,
which keep the body running smoothly.
Iodine is essential for the thyroid gland, which controls growth
and metabolism, while selenium is used to make enzymes that
protect cell walls from cancer-causing free radicals, and helps
prevent DNA damage caused by radiation and some chemicals.
Fish is also a source of vitamin A, which is needed for healthy
skin and eyes, and vitamin D, which is needed to help the body
absorb calcium to strengthen teeth and bones.
12. Food implicated in food-borne disease in the US 1993-1997
(modified from Olsen et al., 2000).
Food
Outbreaks Cases Deaths
Number % Number % Number %
Meat 66 2.4 3 205 3.7 4 13.8
Pork 28 1.0 988 1.1 1 3.4
Poultry 52 1.9 1 871 2.2 0 0.0
Other meat 22 0.8 645 0.7 2 6.9
Shellfish 47 1.7 1 868 2.2 0 0.0
Fish 140 5.1 696 0.8 0 0.0
Egg 19 0.7 367 0.4 3 10.3
Dairy products 18 0.7 313 0.4 1 3.4
Ice cream 15 0.5 1 194 1.4 0 0.0
Bakery goods 35 1.3 853 1.0 0 0.0
Fruits and
70 2.5 12 369 14.4 2 6.9
vegetables
Salads 127 4.6 6 483 7.5 2 6.9
Other 66 2.4 2 428 2.8 0 0.0
Several foods 262 9.5 25 628 29.8 1 3.4
Total known
foods
967 35.2 58 908 68.5 16 55.2
Total unknown
food
1 784 64.8 27 150 31.5 13 44.8
TOTAL 2 751 100.0 86 058 100.0 29 100.0
13. Fresh Fish Qualities:
• Eyes:
• Bright, clear and full
• As fish becomes stale, eyes become cloudy and
sunken
• Gills:
• Red and free from slime
• Gill color fades with age from pink to gray, brown
and then green
14. Fresh Fish Qualities:
• Odor:
• Fresh and mild
• As age increases, a strong, offensive odor develops
• Skin:
• Shiny with bright colors
• As fish ages, skin colors fade and become less
pronounced
15. Fresh Fish Qualities
• Flesh:
• Firm, elastic and not separating from the bones
• As fish ages, flesh changes colors and takes on a
dried out appearance
16. Shellfish Qualities:
• Lobsters and Crabs
• Heavy for size and show leg movement
• Tail of live lobster curls under body and doesn’t
hang down when picked up
17. Shellfish Qualities:
• Oysters and Clams
• Hard, well cupped shells
• Gaping shell indicates the shellfish is dead and is no
longer edible
• Shells are graded as fancy, choice, standard, and
commercial
18. Controlling Quality:
• Quality determined by:
• Species
• Method of catching
• Handling
• Processing
19. Controlling Quality:
• Chemical changes
• Enzymes remain active resulting in spoilage and
flavor changes
• Occur during the first few days of cold storage
before bacterial spoilage begins
20. Controlling Quality:
• Oxidative Rancidity
• Fat content increases rancidity
• Affects taste and aroma
• Bacterial spoilage
• Surface slime, intestines, and gills harbor bacteria
• When fish dies, loses defense against bacteria
21. Characterization of Hazards in
Seafood
Hazard: A biological, chemical or physical agent in, or condition of, food
with a potential to cause an adverse health effect (CAC, 2001).
Biological hazards include pathogenic bacteria (infectious or toxin
producing), biogenic amines, viruses, parasites and aquatic biotoxins.
Seafood-borne pathogenic bacteria may conveniently be divided into 3
groups according to their ecology and origin as those who are indigenous
to:
The aquatic environment
The general environment
The animal/human reservoir
22. Hazards
Physical
bolts and nuts
metal fragments
sand
Biological
pathogenic
bacteria
viruses
worms
helminths
protozoa
Chemical
histamine
heavy metals
pesticides
antibiotics
dyes
mycotoxin
23. Pathogenic bacteria in seafood/aquatic food
Aquatic environment Vibrio spp.
Clostridium botulinum Type E
(non-proteolytic)
Aeromonas
Plesiomonas
General environment Listeria monocytogenes
Clostridium botulinum Type A,B (proteolytic)
C. perfringens
Bacillus cereus
Animal-human reservoir Salmonella
E. coli (EPEC, ETEC, EHEC)
S. typhi
Staphylococcus aureus
Shigella
24. Factors affecting bacterial growth
(Preventive measures)
1. Cleaning and sanitation
2. Personal hygiene
3. Heat (chilling, super chilling, freezing, canning, pasteurizing)
4. Water activity aw ( drying, salting)
5. pH (e.g. fermentation, organic acids)
6. Preservatives (e.g. benzoic and ascorbic acids)
7. Radiation
8. Others
25. Pathogenic parasites transmitted by seafood
raw uncooked fish products
o Nematodes (round worms
o Anisakis simplex - herring
o Angiostrongylus spp. -freshwater prawns, snails, fish
o Pseudoterranova dicipiens (cod worm)
o Cestodes (tape worms)
o Diphyllobothrium latum - fresh water
o D. pacificum – seawater
o Trematodes or flukes
o Paragonimus-snails, crustaceans, fishes (lung flukes)
o Clonorchis spp. – fresh water fish (liver flukes)
o Opisthorchis spp.- fresh water fish
27. Environmental chemical contaminants. Tolerances and
critical limits in fish and fish products (EC, 2001a; FDA,
1998).
Substance
Maximum levels
Food commodity
US (ppm) EU (mg/kg wet weight)
Arsenic 76-86 molluscs, crustaceans
Cadmium 3-4 0.05-1.0 fish, molluscs
Lead 1.5-1.7 0.2-1.0 fish, molluscs
Methyl mercury 1.0 1.0 all fish
PCB 2.0 all fish
DDT, TDE 5.0 all fish
Diedrin 0.0 all fish
Dioxin 0.000004
28. Natural marine toxins
• Scombrotoxin
• Ciguatoxin – ciguatera from marine algae - >400 fish spp.
• Shellfish toxins
Amnesic shellfish poisoning (ASP)/domoic acid poisoning
Diarrhetic shellfish poisoning (DSP)
Neurotoxic shellfish poisoning (NSP)
Paralytic shellfish poisoning (PSP)
• Other marine toxins
Tetrodotoxin - About 80 species of puffer fish, blowfish or fugu
Gempylotoxin -Gemplids, escolars or pelagic mackerels (escolar; oilfish, castor oil
fish or purgative fish; snek)
Tetramine
marine algae –
filter feeding shellfish
29. Physical Hazards
• glass
• utensils, bottles
windows, lights
• metal
• equipment, wire,
employees
• stones
• fields, buildings
• wood
• fields, pallets, boxes,
buildings
• plastic
• packaging materials,
pallets, boxes
• bone
• fish - improper
processing
• insulation
• building material
• personal effects
• jewellery
• cigarettes
• hair
• paper flaked paint
30. Pathogenic bacteria indigenous to the aquatic environment
and naturally present on fish (based on Huss 1997).
Organism Primary habitat Quantitative levels
Clostridium botulinum; non-proteolytic
types B, E, F
Temperate and Arctic aquatic
environment; multiplication in
aquatic carrion (type E)
Generally low (<0.1 spores/g fish)
but up to 5.3 spores/g fish has been
recorded
Pathogenic Vibrio spp. incl.
V. cholerae
V. parahaemolyticus
V. vulnificus
Ubiquitous in warm (>15°C)
seawater environment
Up to 102-103 cfu/g in shellfish; up
to 104-108 cfu/g in intestines of
shellfish-eating fish
Plesiomonas shigelloides Warm aquatic environment;
Freshwater fish (animals)
Aeromonas spp.1 Aquatic environment Generally low, but up to
104 cfu/ml in seawater;
107 cfu/ml in sewage and
106 cfu/g in raw seafood
31. Pathogenic bacteria indigenous to the general environment
and frequently present on fish (based on Huss, 1997).
Organism Primary habitat Quantitative levels
Listeria monocytogenes Soil, decaying vegetation
ubiquitous in general
(temperate) environments
<100 cfu/g in freshly
produced fish products
Clostridium
botulinum proteolytic
type A, B
Soil Generally low (<0.01
spore/g soil)
Clostridium perfringens Soil (type A); animals
(type B, C, D and E)
103-104 cfu/g soil
Bacillus spp. Ubiquitous in general
environment (soil, natural
waters, vegetation)
101-103 cfu/g or ml raw,
processed food
32. Pathogenic bacteria in the animal/human
reservoir.
Organism Primary habitat Quantitative levels
Salmonella spp.
Intestines of warm blooded
animals/humans
Shigella spp.
Escherichia coli
Levels in symptomatic and
asymptomatic carriers vary;
levels in seafood assumed to be
sporadic and low. May
accumulate in molluscan
shellfish
Campylobacter jejuni and other
mesophilic campylobacter
Birds, intestines of warm blooded
animals
Sporadic, low levels. Possibly
accumulation in molluscan shellfish
Staphylococcus aureus Outer surface (skin) and mucus membranes
(nose)
Transient, but present on 50% of
population. Generally <100
cfu/cm2 skin
33. Viruses
The marine environment is full of viruses which represent the most
abundant life form in the sea, typically numbering ten billion per litre,
however, none of these are pathogenic to man (Lees, 2000).
Viruses being implicated in seafood-borne diseases all have their niche in
the human gastro-intestinal (GI) tract and their presence in water and
seafood is a consequence of poor hygiene; either water being
contaminated with sewage or products being contaminated by food
handlers.
34. Groups of viruses causing gastrointestinal diseases from
seafood. Based on Lees (2000) and Caul (2000).
Virus Type Family Associated with
seafood-borne
disease
Comment
Norwalk-like SS1 RNA Caliciviridae Frequently
Hepatitis A SS RNA Picornaviridae Frequently
Hepatitis E SS RNA Caliciviridae ? not documented cause of enteric non-
A and non-B
hepatitis. Outbreaks
associated with
drinking water
Astrovirus SS RNA Astroviridae astrovirus from
oysters were
suspected
in one outbreak
few food-borne cases
Rotavirus DS2 RNA Reoviridae not documented isolated from sewage
Adenovirus DS DNA Adenoviridae not documented isolated from sewage
and seafood
35. Parasites
• The presence of parasites in fish is very common, but
most of them are of little concern with regard to
economics or public health.
• More than 50 species of helminth parasites from fish and
shellfish are known to cause diseases in man.
36. Pathogenic parasites transmitted by
seafood.
Parasite Geographical distribution
Nematodes or round worms
Anisakis spp. Worldwide
Gnathostoma spp. Worldwide
Capillaria philippensis The Philippines
Angiostrongylus spp. Worldwide
Cestodes or tape worms
Diphyllobothrium spp. Worldwide
Trematodes or flukes
Clonorchis spp. South East Asia
Opisthorchis spp. South East Asia, Eastern Europe
Heterophyes spp. Worldwide
Paragonimus spp. Worldwide
Metagonimus yokagawai Asia, Egypt
37. Marine biotoxins and the associated
poisonings.
The disease Toxins Occurrence
PSP-Paralytic shellfish
Saxitoxin Worldwide
poisoning
DSP-Diarrheic shellfish
poisoning
Okadaic acid
dinophysis toxin
Worldwide
NSP-Neurotoxic shellfish
poisoning
Brevetoxins USA, Caribbean, New
Zealand
ASP-Amnesic shellfish
poisoning
Domoic acid North America
Ciguatera fish poisoning Ciguatoxin (CTX) Tropical, subtropical
Puffer fish (tetrodotoxin)
poisoning
Tetrodotoxin (TTX) Japan, South Pacific
38. Amino acid precursors and biogenic amines
formed in food products.
Amino acid precursor Biogenic amine
Histidine Histamine
Ornithine Putrescine
Putrescine1 Spermidine
Lysine Cadaverine
Tyrosine Tyramine
Arginine Agmatine
39. Examples of antibiotics used in aquaculture.
Group Compound Comments
Sulphonamides Sulphamerazine
Sulphaimidine
Sulfadimethoxine1
Bacteriostatic agents with broad-spectrum activity against
furunculosis in salmonids (trout and salmon).
Potentiated
Sulphonamide
Co-trimazine/Sulfatrim1,2,3 (combination of
trimetho-prim and sulfadiazine)
Used for treating diseases in salmon and trout (furunculosis,
vibriosis and enteric red mouth).
Tetracyclines Chlortetracycline
Oxytetracycline1,2,3,4
Wide use in aquaculture. Effective against several fish
pathogens and is relatively cheap. Used in salmon, trout,
turbot and shrimp farming. Approved for prevention of "red
tail" in lobsters in Canada.
Penicillins (Beta-lactams)
Ampicillin4
Amoxycillin2,4
Used to treat furunculosis in salmon and rainbow trout fry
syndrome (RTFS) in Europe.
Benzyl penicillin3 Used for yellowtail and sea bream in Japan
Quinolones Ciprofloxacin Used in shrimp farms in Asia
Enrofloxacin Used in shrimp farms in Asia
Norfloxacin
Used in shrimp farms in Asia
Oxolinic acid2,3,4
Perfloxacin
Flumequine3,4
Sarafloxacin2 EU MRL 150ug/kg fish muscle
Nitrofurans Furazolidone Broad-spectrum antimicrobial agent. Used in shrimp farms in
Asia. Use discouraged as it is a potential carcinogen.
Macrolides Erthromycin4
Spiramycin
Aminoglycosides Gentamycin
Other antibiotics Chloramphenicol Residues in foods may cause aplastic anaemia in man5. Use
banned in the European Union.
Florfenicol1,3,4
Thiamephenicol4
Tiamulin
Nalidixic acid
Milozacin
Used to treat RTFS and furunculosis in salmon.
41. • The increasing demand for fish and fishery products and the
development in international fish trade have raised major
concerns about:
The overexploitation of aquatic resources
the quality and safety of the products internationally traded.
Globalisation of the economy and the development of regional
economic groupings have highlighted the need for harmonizing
fish safety and quality assurance approaches, with the view to
ensure fish safety and fair trade practices
42. The World Trade Organization
(WTO) agreement
• The Final Act of the Uruguay Round of multilateral trade
negotiations, which began in Punta del Este, Uruguay in
September 1986 and concluded in Marrakesh, Morocco in April
1994, established the World Trade Organization (WTO) to
succeed the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT).
• Significant implications for food safety and quality arise from
the Final Act of the Uruguay Round, especially from two
binding agreements:
• The Agreement on the Application of Sanitary and Phytosanitary (SPS)
Measures
• The Agreement on Technical Barriers to Trade (TBT Agreement).
43. WTO Agreements of particular
relevance for fisheries
oAgreement on Sanitary and Phytosanitary Measures (SPS)
oAgreement on Technical Barriers to Trade (TBT)
oAgreement on Subsidies and Countervailing Measures
oAgreement on Import Licensing Procedures
oAgreement on Anti-Dumping
oAgreement on Rules of Origin
oDispute Settlement
oTariff reduction (GATT)
44. The Agreement on the Application of Sanitary
and Phytosanitary (SPS) Measures
• The SPS agreement confirms the right of WTO member
countries to apply measures necessary to protect human,
animal and plant life and health.
• The purpose of the SPS Agreement is to ensure that measures
established by governments to protect human, animal and
plant life and health, in the agricultural sector, including
fisheries, are consistent with obligations prohibiting arbitrary
or unjustifiable discrimination on trade between countries
where the same conditions prevail and are not disguised
restrictions on international trade
45. Agreements on the application
of SPS measures…..
• It requires that, with regard to food safety measures, WTO
members base their national measures on international
standards, guidelines and other recommendations adopted by
the Codex Alimentarius Commission (CAC) where they exist.
• Furthermore, the SPS Agreement calls for a programme of
harmonization based on international standards.
• This work is guided by the WTO Committee on SPS measures,
to which representatives of the CAC, the International Office
of Epizootics (OIE) which deals with animal (including fish)
health, and the International Plant Protection Convention
(IPPC) which deals with plant protection are invited
46. Agreements on the application
of SPS measures…..
• Finally, the SPS Agreement requires that SPS measures are to
be based on an assessment of the risks to humans, animal and
plant life and health using internationally accepted risk
assessment techniques.
47. Agreements on the application
of SPS measures (highlights)
• Right of Members to apply measures they deem necessary to
protect human, animal and plant life and health
• Should not be a disguised restriction on international trade
• Protection levels should not be more trade restrictive than
required to provide “appropriate level of protection” APLP
48. The agreement on Technical
Barriers to Trade (TBT)
• The Technical Barriers to Trade Agreement (TBT) ensures that
members do not use technical regulations or standards as
disguised measures to protect domestic industries from foreign
competition.
• Labelling disputes
• Testing procedures
49. The Food and Agriculture Organization of the United
Nations (FAO): Codex Alimentarius
The CAC is an intergovernmental body with a membership of 165 Member
governments. In addition, observers from international scientific
organizations, food industry, food trade and consumer associations may
attend sessions of the Commission and of its subsidiary bodies.
Since 1962, the Codex Alimentarius Commission (CAC) has been
responsible for implementing the Joint FAO/WHO Food Standards
Programme Codex Alimentarius
The Commission's primary objectives are the protection of the health of
consumers, the assurance of fair practices in food trade and the
coordination of the work on food standards
The Commission's primary objectives are the protection of the health of
consumers, the assurance of fair practices in food trade and the
coordination of the work on food standards.
50. The Food and Agriculture Organization of the
United Nations (FAO): Codex Alimentarius
• The work of the Codex Alimentarius is divided between two
basic types of committees:
• nine general subject matter(s) Committees that deal with
general principles, hygiene, veterinary drugs, pesticides, food
additives, labelling, methods of analysis, nutrition and
import/export inspection and certification systems and
• 12 Commodity Committees which deal with a specific type of
food class or group, such as dairy and dairy products, fats and
oils, or fish and fish products
51. The FAO Code of Conduct for Responsible
Fisheries
• The FAO Committee on Fisheries (COFI) at its Nineteenth
Session in March 1991 called for the development of new
concepts which would lead to responsible, sustained fisheries.
• Subsequently, the International Conference on Responsible
Fishing, held in 1992 in Cancûn (Mexico) further requested FAO
to prepare an international Code of Conduct to address these
concerns.
• The outcome of this Conference, particularly the Declaration
of Cancûn, was an important contribution to the 1992 United
Nations Conference on Environment and Development
(UNCED), in particular its Agenda 21.
52. Other institutions:
• Global Aquaculture Alliance: GAA is a non-profit trade
association dedicated to advancing responsible aquaculture
through aquaculture certification standards.
• Global Food Safety Initiative:The Global Food Safety
Initiative is a business-driven initiative for the continuous
improvement of food safety management systems to ensure
confidence in the delivery of safe food to consumers
worldwide.
• GFSI provides a platform for collaboration between some of
the world’s leading food safety experts from retailer,
manufacturer and food service companies, service providers
associated with the food supply chain, international
organizations, academia and government.
53. Other institutions:
• The GFSI objectives are to:
• Reduce food safety risks by delivering equivalence and
convergence between effective food safety management
systems
• Manage cost in the global food system by eliminating
redundancy and improving operational efficiency
• Develop competencies and capacity building in food safety to
create consistent and effective global food systems
• Provide a unique international stakeholder platform for
collaboration, knowledge exchange and networking
54. HACCP
• HACCP: is a system which identifies, evaluates and controls
hazards which are significant for food safety (CAC, 2001).
• The traditional approach to food safety assurance was based
on applying codes of Good Hygiene Practices (GHP) and Good
Manufacturing Practices (GMP) in food processing.
• Good Manufacturing Practices (GMP): Those procedures for a
particular manufacturing operation which practitioners of,
and experts in, that operation consider to be the best
available using current knowledge.
• Good Hygienic Practices (GHP): all practices regarding the
conditions and measures necessary to ensure the safety and
suitability of food at all stages of the food chain.
55. Food Safety and quality, an integrated approach
(from Jouve, 1998).
56. The basic seven principles of HACCP
Principle 1: Conduct a hazard analysis
Principle 2: Determine the critical control
points (CCPs)
Principle 3: Establish critical limits
Principle 4: Establish monitoring procedures
Principle 5: Establish corrective actions
Principle 6: Establish verification
procedures
Principle 7: Establish record-keeping and
documentation procedures.
57. Application of the HACCP principles
• The Codex guidelines suggest that the introduction and
application of the HACCP principles should follow a series of 12
steps in a logic sequence as described below:
• Step 1: Assemble the HACCP team
• The microbiologist ,processing specialist, food chemist, a food engineer as
well as packaging technologists, sales staff, training and personnel
managers
• Step 2: Describe product
• A full and detailed description of the final production must be drawn
up. The raw materials and ingredients used must be specified including
the market name or Latin name of the fishery component.
58. Step 2:…….
Elements of the product description
1 Product name
2 Raw material and ingredients used
3 Parameters influencing safety (aw, pH, salt%, etc.)
4 Processing
5 Packaging and packaging material
6 Storage conditions and shelf life
7 Conditions during distribution
8 Intended use and consumer
9 Labelling instructions
59. • Step 3: Identify intended use and consumer
• Step 4: Construct flow diagram
• Step 5: On-site confirmation of flow diagram
• Step 6: List all potential hazards associated with each step
in the operation, conduct a hazard analysis and consider any
measure to control identified hazards (Principle 1)
The words "hazard" and "hazard analysis" have been defined by Codex
(CAC, 2001):
Hazard
A biological, chemical or
physical agent in, or a condition
of, food with the potential to
cause an adverse health effect
(CAC, 2001)
Hazard Analysis
The process of collecting and evaluating
information on hazards and conditions leading to
their presence to decide which are significant for
food safety and therefore should be addressed
in the HACCP plan (CAC, 2001)
60. • Step 7: Determine the critical control points
(CCPs)
Is a step at which control can be applied and is
essential to prevent or eliminate a food safety
hazard or reduce it to an acceptable level (CAC
62. • Step 8 Establish critical limits
• Critical limit:is a criterion which separates acceptability from
unacceptability (CAC, 2001)
• Step 9: Establish monitoring procedures (Principle 4)
Monitoring of CCPs serves three purposes (NACMCF, 1997):
• To determine if there is a loss of control and a deviation occurs at a
CCP. Appropriate action must then be taken
• Monitoring keeps check on the operation and provides information
whether there is a trend towards loss of control and action can be
taken to bring the process back into control before a deviation occur
• Provides written documentation for use in verification and audit. All
records must be signed.
63. • Monitoring: is the act of conducting a planned sequence of
observations or measurements of control parameters to
assess whether a CCP is under control (CAC, 2001)
• Step 10: Establish corrective actions (Principle 5)
• Corrective Action: is any action to be taken when the
results of monitoring at the CCP indicate a loss of control
(CAC, 2001)
• Step 11: Establish verification procedures (Principle
6)
• Verification: is the application of methods, procedures,
tests and other evaluations, in addition to monitoring to
determine compliance with the HACCP plan (CAC, 2001).
• Step 12: Establish record-keeping and documentation
procedures (Principle 7)
• Record keeping: ensures that the information resulting
from the HACCP study and implementation of the resulting
HACCP plan is available for validation, verification, review,
auditing and other purposes (ILSI, 1997)
64. Considerations in the Application of the HACCP Principles to
Seafood Production
• The safety of seafood products varies considerably and is
influenced by a number of factors such as origin of the fish,
microbiological ecology of the product, handling and
processing practices and preparations before consumption.
• Taking most of these aspects into consideration, seafood can
conveniently be grouped as shown below (modified from Huss
(1994))
65. Considerations in the Application of the HACCP Principles to
Seafood Production…….
Molluscan shellfish
Raw fish to be eaten without any cooking
Fresh or frozen fish and crustaceans - to be fully cooked before
consumption.
Lightly preserved fish products i.e. NaCl <6% in water phase,
pH >5.0. The prescribed storage temperature is <5°C. This
group includes salted, marinated, cold smoked and gravad fish
Fermented fish, i.e. NaCl <8% NaCl, pH changing from neutral
to acid. Typically, the products are stored at ambient
temperature
66. Considerations in the Application of the HACCP Principles to
Seafood Production…….
• Semi-preserved fish i.e. NaCl >6% in water phase, or pH < 5,
preservatives (sorbate, benzoate, nitrite) may be added. The
prescribed storage temperature is <10°C. This group includes
salted and/or marinated fish or caviar, fermented fish (after
completion of fermentation)
• Mildly heat-processed (pasteurised, cooked, hot smoked) fish
products and crustaceans (including pre-cooked, breaded
fillets). The prescribed storage temperature is <5°C
• Heat-processed (sterilised, packed in sealed containers)
• Dried, smoke-dried fish, heavily salted fish. Can be stored at
ambient temperatures.
67. HACCP AND ISO
• The seven HACCP principles are included in the
international standard ISO 22000 FSMS 2005.
• This standard is a complete food safety and
quality management system incorporating the elements of
prerequisite programmes(GMP & SSOP), HACCP and the
quality management system, which together form an
organization's Total Quality Management system
• ISO 22000 will not replace HACCP.
• HACCP is a system - ISO 22000 is a standard
• ISO 22000 can be used to measure the success of a
company's implementation of HACC
68. National Regulations (India)
India is a member of WTO
All rules and regulations that apply in WTO are also applicable to
India.
Fishing in India is a major industry in its coastal states, employing
over 14 million people.
India plays a major role in the global seafood export among the
Asian countries.
The marine products exports from India reached 8 lakh tonnes
worth 2.8 billion US $ in 2010-11
71. The Food Safety and Standards
Authority of India
• Established under the Food Safety and Standards Act, 2006 as a
statutory body for laying down science based standards for
articles of food and regulating manufacturing, processing,
distribution, sale and import of food so as to ensure safe and
wholesome food for human consumption.
• "Codex India" the National Codex Contact Point (NCCP) for
India, is located at Food Safety and Standards Authority of
India (Ministry of Health and Family Welfare). It coordinates
and promotes Codex activities in India in association with the
National Codex Committee and facilitates India's input to the
work of Codex through an established consultation process.
72. The Food Safety and Standards Regulations,
2011
FSS (Licensing and Registration of Food businesses)
regulation, 2011
FSS (Packaging and Labelling) regulation, 2011
FSS (Food product standards and Food Additives) regulation,
2011 (part I)
FSS (Food product standards and food additives) regulation,
2011 (part II)
FSS (Prohibition and Restriction on sales) regulation, 2011
FSS (contaminants, toxins and residues) regulation, 2011
FSS (Laboratory and sampling analysis) regulation, 2011
Food Safety and Standards Rules (Amendment),2013
(Currently being developed)
73.
74.
75.
76. Conclusion
• Seafood constitutes an important food resource providing
much-need nutrients
• Globalization, international trade and increased awareness
on food safety have inspired development of national and
international regulations
• HACCP is the key instrument in an integrated approach to
seafood safety and quality
• WTO, WHO, FAO,Codex Alimentarius etc are key players in
food safety and quality regulations
77. References
• Huss, H.H., Ababouch, L. and Gram, L. (2004). Assessment and
management of seafood safety and quality. FAO Fisheries
technical paper 444.
• Training material from UNU-FTP/Icelandic Fisheries Laboratories
WHO Technical Report Series, No. 883, 1999. Food safety issues
associated with products from aquaculture
• International Commission on Microbial Specification for Foods
(1996). Microorganisms in Foods. 5. Microbiological
specifications of food pathogens. Blackwell Scientific
Puplications.
• Website: http://www.seafood.ucdavis.edu
• Lehane and Olley (2000). Histamine fish poisoning revisited. Int.
Journal of Food Microbiol. 58, 1-37